The Refugees. Arthur Conan Doyle

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then, that these people have too hard a measure?" said he.

      "Too hard? Nay, your Majesty errs on the side of mercy."

      "I hear that they are leaving my kingdom in great numbers."

      "And surely it is better so, sire; for what blessing can come upon a country which has such stubborn infidels within its boundaries?"

      "Those who are traitors to God can scarce be loyal to the king," remarked Bossuet. "Your Majesty's power would be greater if there were no temple, as they call their dens of heresy, within your dominions."

      "My grandfather promised them protection. They are shielded, as you well know, by the edict which be gave at Nantes."

      "But it lies with your Majesty to undo the mischief that has been done."

      "And how?"

      "By recalling the edict."

      "And driving into the open arms of my enemies two millions of my best artisans and of my bravest servants. No, no, father, I have, I trust, every zeal for Mother-Church, but there is some truth in what De Frontenac said this morning of the evil which comes from mixing the affairs of this world with those of the next. How say you, Louvois?"

      "With all respect to the Church, sire, I would say that the devil has given these men such cunning of hand and of brain that they are the best workers and traders in your Majesty's kingdom. I know not how the state coffers are to be filled if such tax-payers go from among us. Already many have left the country and taken their trades with them. If all were to go, it would be worse for us than a lost campaign."

      "But," remarked Bossuet, "if it were once known that the king's will had been expressed, your Majesty may rest assured that even the worst of his subjects bear him such love that they would hasten to come within the pale of Holy Church. As long as the edict stands, it seems to them that the king is lukewarm, and that they may abide in their error."

      The king shook his head. "They have always been stubborn folk," said he.

      "Perhaps," remarked Louvois, glancing maliciously at Bossuet, "were the bishops of France to make an offering to the state of the treasures of their sees, we might then do without these Huguenot taxes."

      "All that the Church has is at the king's service," answered Bossuet curtly.

      "The kingdom is mine and all that is in it," remarked Louis, as they entered the Grand Salon, in which the court assembled after chapel, "yet I trust that it may be long before I have to claim the wealth of the Church."

      "We trust so, sire," echoed the ecclesiastics.

      "But we may reserve such topics for our council-chamber. Where is Mansard? I must see his plans for the new wing at Marly." He crossed to a side table, and was buried in an instant in his favourite pursuit, inspecting the gigantic plans of the great architect, and inquiring eagerly as to the progress of the work.

      "I think," said Pere la Chaise, drawing Bossuet aside, "that your Grace has made some impression upon the king's mind."

      "With your powerful assistance, father."

      "Oh, you may rest assured that I shall lose no opportunity of pushing on the good work."

      "If you take it in hand, it is done."

      "But there is another who has more weight than I."

      "The favourite, De Montespan?"

      "No, no; her day is gone. It is Madame de Maintenon."

      "I hear that she is very devout."

      "Very. But she has no love for my Order. She is a Sulpitian. Yet we may all work to one end. Now if you were to speak to her, your Grace."

      "With all my heart."

      "Show her how good a service it would be could she bring about the banishment of the Huguenots."

      "I shall do so."

      "And offer her in return that we will promote – " he bent forward and whispered into the prelate's ear.

      "What! He would not do it!"

      "And why? The queen is dead."

      "The widow of the poet Scarron!"

      "She is of good birth. Her grandfather and his were dear friends."

      "It is impossible."

      "But I know his heart, and I say it is possible."

      "You certainly know his heart, father, if any can. But such a thought had never entered my head."

      "Then let it enter and remain there. If she will serve the Church, the Church will serve her. But the king beckons, and I must go."

      The thin dark figure hastened off through the throng of courtiers, and the great Bishop of Meaux remained standing with his chin upon his breast, sunk in reflection.

      By this time all the court was assembled in the Grand Salon, and the huge room was gay from end to end with the silks, the velvets, and the brocades of the ladies, the glitter of jewels, the flirt of painted fans, and the sweep of plume or aigrette. The grays, blacks, and browns of the men's coats toned down the mass of colour, for all must be dark when the king was dark, and only the blues of the officers' uniforms, and the pearl and gray of the musketeers of the guard, remained to call back those early days of the reign when the men had vied with the women in the costliness and brilliancy of their wardrobes. And if dresses had changed, manners had done so even more. The old levity and the old passions lay doubtless very near the surface, but grave faces and serious talk were the fashion of the hour. It was no longer the lucky coup at the lansquenet table, the last comedy of Moliere, or the new opera of Lully about which they gossiped, but it was on the evils of Jansenism, on the expulsion of Arnauld from the Sorbonne, on the insolence of Pascal, or on the comparative merits of two such popular preachers as Bourdaloue and Massilon. So, under a radiant ceiling and over a many-coloured floor, surrounded by immortal paintings, set thickly in gold and ornament, there moved these nobles and ladies of France, all moulding themselves upon the one little dark figure in their midst, who was himself so far from being his own master that he hung balanced even now between two rival women, who were playing a game in which the future of France and his own destiny were the stakes.

      Chapter V. Children of Belial

      The elderly Huguenot had stood silent after his repulse by the king, with his eyes cast moodily downwards, and a face in which doubt, sorrow, and anger contended for the mastery. He was a very large, gaunt man, raw-boned and haggard, with a wide forehead, a large, fleshy nose, and a powerful chin. He wore neither wig nor powder, but Nature had put her own silvering upon his thick grizzled locks, and the thousand puckers which clustered round the edges of his eyes, or drew at the corners of his mouth, gave a set gravity to his face which needed no device of the barber to increase it. Yet in spite of his mature years, the swift anger with which he had sprung up when the king refused his plaint, and the keen fiery glance which he had shot at the royal court as they filed past him with many a scornful smile and whispered gibe at his expense, all showed that he had still preserved something of the strength and of the spirit of his youth. He was dressed as became his rank, plainly and yet well, in a sad-coloured brown kersey coat with silver-plated buttons, knee-breeches of the same, and white woollen stockings, ending in broad-toed black leather shoes cut across with a great steel buckle. In one hand he carried his low felt hat, trimmed with gold edging, and in the other

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